Good, Fast, Cheap: Pick Two

Google the phrase “Good Fast Cheap Pick Two” and you get over 78 million search results. There are only 1.7 million for “Fountain of Youth.” Apparently people desire good, fast and cheap more than they do the secret to staying young. I see requests like this posted in online venues like LinkedIn. Is it the economy? Is there a growing sense of entitlement? Or is it more benign than that—businesses don’t realize that asking for good, fast and cheap will hinder their ability to be effective?

To ask for and receive all three is mostly a fantasy. Even two are a stretch, as you’ll see below. But many businesses, especially nonprofits, often find themselves hard pressed to eliminate two of the three. The problem is that your organization deserves good work but the people most likely to deliver good work run from these requests.

You wouldn’t buy a car, build a bridge, hire an electrician or find a mate with these three criteria. Well, possibly, if you didn’t care about the results.

But let’s break these down so we can see the impacts of the different scenarios.

When you only get two:

Fast and Cheap. With this option, high-quality is likely to suffer in the form of creative output, research time, accuracy, and ability to test and consider options. Make sure you are comfortable accepting some or all these drawbacks. If a designer does agree to work with these requirements, make sure the designer explains what the drawbacks are so you can avoid surprises. Visual examples can help the designer understand your expectations. Getting on the same page quickly helps with fast, as there’s no time to waste. (See below for defining good.)

Good and Fast. To get these, extra time beyond the normal work hours is usually involved. This could mean nights or weekends, which usually carry a rush fee. For printing, it might mean paying a premium to bump another job. And outside services like photography or web development might carry their own rush fee.

Good and Cheap. A designer or printing company might lower their rate for an organization in need of services beyond their budget. The project can also be established as pro bono. But to do good work and keep costs down, this project usually cannot be made a high priority. The project will most likely be done only after they meet their full-fee commitments.

Be wary of those who jump to meet a request like good, fast and cheap. If you leave your criteria as open-ended as this, you’ll be unhappy with the results. Only through communicating what good, fast and cheap meansto you will you get the results you are looking for.

Better approaches are to:

• Define good.

• Plan to your advantage.

• Create a budget.

None of these are novel concepts, but if you read below, you’ll understand some of the implications of their lack.

Define good.
Develop the ability to evaluate or describe the good you need. This way, you don’t waste your time or that of another, or worse, find out that your visions of good don’t match after you’ve already invested time. Share printed samples or website links if you’re trying to express your idea of good to a designer. Similarly, request samples if what you’re looking for is a printing company. Use meaningful, universal, descriptive words to paint the right picture for the other party. A good printing company to one person might mean flawless ink coverage, but to another, good means that the pages are in the right order. These are very different!

Plan to your advantage.We need fast when we don’t plan or when we want to seize an opportunity. Many designers and printers will bend over backwards to help a client. And while no one loves transferring their lack of planning to another party, and emergencies do arise, poor planning should be the exception, and not the rule. Use one of your own recent endeavors (an article, press release, proposal, business plan) as a rough indicator of how much time you need to factor in. Most of us are too idealistic and unaware of how much time we spend on tasks. Be as realistic as possible. If a designer or printing company does bail you out, reward them in the form of patience, money, loyalty, appreciation, creative freedom or a good referral!

Have a budget.
Second only to planning, budgets are often absent. What many don’t realize is that everyone wants affordable — no matter the available funds or the size and caliber of the company. A nonprofit’s definition of affordable might be different than that of a for-profit business, but that’s also why the word affordable is meaningless to use in seeking a designer.

Sending out a request for an affordable designer does two things. First, it indicates that cost alone is the most important thing, over quality and effectiveness. And second, the desperate designers come running and the good ones retreat. You will know soon enough if you can’t afford that good one via a simple cost request. Advertising cheap begets cheap.

One approach is to say, “This is how much I have to spend. What can we do with that?” And not, “I need this. How much will it cost?” The desire for cheap, without definition, leaves you too vulnerable to a mishap. Instead, strive for value —the specific benefit you receive at the specific price you pay.

The more well-defined and specific these requirements, the more likely you will end up with a timely and cost-effective end product whose quality you are happy with. Your organization deserves the best it can get with the resources available.

Like this:

0 comments

Unfortunately, Jane, this seems to be the lot of many of us who work as freelances.
In my field, translation, it is probably not too different than in design. If anything, take pity on us translators who have to face: a) the customer rarely (if ever) finds out whether we did a good job because the whole point about asking for a translation is that you DON’T understand either the translator’s output (if in a language other than your own) or the input (what the source text was in the first place because it was in a foreign language). Visual output such as yours, on the other hand, is recognizable by the right part of the brain, regardless of nationality. That is why the Institute of Translation and Interpreting (the professional association of translators of the United Kingdom to which I belong) recommends pictograms first in any kind of international communications and then words for concepts in which translation is called for.

Thanks for reading Manuel. I couldn’t help but laugh at your comment that the customer doesn’t know if you did good job because they can’t read what you did! True. But in design, it’s not that much more tangible. What I suggest is hard, for sure, but hopefully by understanding what the implications are and maybe the motivation behind the request, we can try to communicate value better. There also comes a point, I think, where it’s not possible to work under certain conditions. We sometimes have to save our spirit and energy to do better work for better clients. I think we forget that we are not giving anything of value by complying with all three. Even the client doesn’t benefit.